Pixie Faire Style Guide 1940s Fashion For Dolls
We’ve put together the ultimate guide to help you make a historically accurate 1940s look for your doll, such as Molly McIntire®! This period of history was dominated by World War II, which lasted from 1939 to 1945 (the United States, however, did not enter the war until December of 1941, after the bombing of Pearl Harbor). Despite only lasting six years, the war had an impactful influence on the fashion industry, both domestically and abroad. To understand 1940s fashion, focus on these five key components: separates, dresses, utility clothes, girls’ clothing, and accessories. Use these elements to put together your own 1940s outfit for your doll.
WWII AND THE AMERICAN FASHION INDUSTRY
The American fashion industry would probably not be where it is today without World War II. Before World War II, Americans copied their fashions from Europe. Some American brands would actually go so far as to send “spies” over to Paris to watch their runways and sketch down the latest looks as quickly as possible. These sketches would then be brought back to the United States where they would be put into production for the American market. When the war broke out across Europe, nearly all fashion houses were shut down. The fashion industry was especially hard hit when the Germans started their occupation of Paris in 1940. Between no new looks coming from Europe and the United States still living a somewhat peaceful life outside of the war, America was in need of clothing. This encouraged the development of the American fashion industry which has since become one of the leading influences in the fashion world.
SEPARATES
One favored look of the 1940s were separates for women, particularly the skirt suit. When the men went off to fight in the war, the women had to pick up the slack on the home front. Women worked in factories, businesses, and even in the military and each one needed something to wear. Hence the skirt suit emerged, which was both business professional and still feminine. It could be casually worn for errands or decorated for military officers. The popular jacket style for skirt suits was well-tailored with boxy, padded shoulders, and peplum-waisted (which emphasized the hour-glass figure that was highly favored at the time). The skirt of the suit would fall past the knee and could either be full or tight depending on the occasion.
DRESSES
When women weren’t needing special clothes for the workforce, they would still often opt for dresses. Dresses were often simplistic and plain due to the war. Hemlines were cut to the knee and extraneous embellishments were removed to keep the clothes from becoming too wasteful. Skirts on dresses were A-line shaped to give flare, without using too much fabric. Sleeves were shorter (to the elbow or above) and had very little extra puff to preserve fabric usage. Like the jackets of the skirt suits, shoulders were boxy and often accentuated using shoulder pads. Dresses nearly always had belts made of coordinating or matching fabrics and larger, military-inspired lapels. Popular neckline styles on dresses ranged from V-neck to sweetheart necklines. Other popular dress styles at the time included button-down shirt dresses and wrap dresses.
UTILITY CLOTHES
Born from necessity, utility clothes were some of the most dominating items during the 1940s. Clothing and textiles were rationed because of the ongoing war and the tireless war effort. In places like Britain, where the war was particularly bad, government-mandated rationing was taken to the extreme. Utility clothes were effortlessly practical. They were made to be worn across all the seasons only using specific, carefully curated, and government-rationed fabrics. They were designed with simple lines and rarely featured extraneous trimmings. The line of utility garments ranged from menswear to childrenswear and covered everything in between. Removing pockets, thinning collars, reducing the number of buttons, and other measures were taken to ensure that no large amount of fabric was being used unnecessarily. It has been estimated that because of the austerity utility clothing, nearly 4 million square yards of cotton (not including other popular fabrics) were saved for the war effort.
GIRLS’ CLOTHING TRENDS
Like through much of history, girl’s clothing in the 1940s followed somewhat closely with what their mothers or older sisters would wear. During the 1940s, girls would mostly wear dresses with simple lines, similar to shapes that adult women would wear. Girls’ dresses, however, would feature many more frills than their adult counterparts. Things like lace, ribbons, smocking, and extra buttons were added to make outfits feel more youthful and fun. Shorts for casual wear were also introduced into girls’ wardrobes during this time because they used less fabric (which was good for rationing) and were more comfortable (which was good for play). Rationing coupons and limitations were more flexible for children’s wear during this time because children outgrow clothes quickly. Newly developed synthetic fabrics (see FABRIC AND PRINTS below) were favored for children’s wear because it made the clothes more durable and less costly to produce and purchase. Also important to note during this era was the division between “girl colors” and “boy colors.” For one of the first times in history color differentiation between the genders was taking place. Girls adopted colors like the traditional pink or other pastels and boy took on darker, more masculine looking colors like blue, green, or grey.
ACCESSORIES
Even though the world was desperate to reserve extraneous goods during the war, women still found ways to accessorize properly. Apart from stockings, other popular accessories at the time were belts, gloves, and headscarves. As mentioned in the dresses section above, belts were nearly always featured on dresses, or even on women’s pants and skirt suits too. Belts at the time were thin, plain, and fabric-covered to match outfits. Past the early 1940s, belts did not feature metal buckles because of the metal rationing at the time. Instead, a tie-front belt was the most popular style during the war. After the war, belts became larger, featured metal closures, and came in many different materials, like leather or plastic (which weren’t offered during the war). Gloves were always worn outside of the house and were made out of leather or suede whenever possible. They were usually made in neutral colors so that they could be worn with many different outfits. Sometimes they would be coordinated to the hat for an extra-stylish look. One final popular accessory of the 1940s would have been the headscarf. Headscarves were large, triangular fabric cuts (usually rayon, or, if possible, silk), and tied around the head to protect women’s hair and keep it out of their faces. They are one of the most iconic women’s accessories from the 1940s thanks to the Rosie the Riveter drawings.
FABRIC AND PRINTS
Despite the darkness of the world (and maybe even in defiance to it), womenswear throughout the 1940s opted for vibrant and happy colors. While some colors did come in and out of popularity throughout the decade, colors like navy blue, pink, golden yellow, red, and a range of greens were consistently popular. In the summer, pastel versions of these colors were most commonly used. During the winter, stronger and bolder versions of these colors were used. These colors were used in a variety of prints, but the most favored were polka dots, plaids, stripes, checks, florals, and abstract prints. The desired fabric choices of the time were rayon, wool, cotton, jersey knit, velvet, or even silk on rare occasions. Take a look below for our suggested fabric choices!
Light Pink Ditsy Floral from Joann Fabrics
Buffalo Check Cotton from Joann Fabrics
Royal White Dot from Joann Fabrics
Heathered Brown Solid Wool Flannel from Mood Fabrics
Pea Green Rose Floral from Mood Fabrics
Pixie Faire offers a wide variety of 1940s inspired patterns for a variety of doll sizes Check out the full collection HERE!
We'd love to see your creations too, so if you make one, please tag us on Instagram @PixieFaire
You can also share pictures in the Pixie Faire Inspiration Gallery right here on the website, either use the #pixiefaire when posting on IG, or just click the little + box to upload your picture right here on the website!
Thanks everyone!
For Pixie Faire, Katie
(This post and giveaway are not endorsed or affiliated with American Girl®, no endorsement implied.)
We’d love to hear from you. Please leave a comment and tell us, What fashion element of the 40s do you admire most?
Fun to read about the 40’s fashion.
Love the 40’s fashions, especially the classic suit cuts and shoulder pads.
As a baby boomer (’49er) I came in a little late for the forties fashions but as a fashion student in college I developed a deep love for all fashions of the era. Molly is simply my favorite historic AG and I love to design for her whether it is a dress for school, a dance costume or an outfit for the dude ranch. Thank goodness more young people will have a chance to own her and reade her great stories
Actually, I love the hairstyles. Thanks!
I love all forties fashions and I Molly is my favorite historic AG
I never knew that the fashion choices for the 40s were due to the war. I just thought it was a random fad that came about. I love that it was a fashion that came of necessity. Great post!
Since I was born in 1945, I wore some of these outfits and so did my mom. There’s a photo of me at 2-3 years with a plaid wool skirt. There are also some photos of my mom with the padded shoulder suits and dresses.
I loved the simple looks of the 1940’s, I was born in 1947 so got to wear some of those. :)
I was born at the end of the 40s, so don’t remember much about 40s fashion; but I do love the classic styles of the 40s.
I costumed my daughter for a theater production in middle school in a 1940’s jacket and skirt. I loved the clothing of that time I loved the simple lines but beautiful colors of the period. I need to get out my 40’s style fabric and Molly!
Those dresses are so cute!! In the 60’s I had a dress that could be worn with buttons down the front or turned around with the buttons down the back! It was like a shift with long sleeves and v neck on the button side and a Jewel neckline for the back side. Grams bought it for my birthday!!.No one else had one!! I like the shirtwaist dresses with the Peter Pan collar but V-necks are my favorite!! The shirt waist dresses could be made plain or fancy or dressy for a party!! So many looks from one pattern!! Makes it fun!!
I like the 40s suits for women — nicely tailored and a good fit. The WAC Uniform from Ruby is going on my wish list.
I was born just as WWII started, and these are the clothes of my childhood. I’ve always wanted a Molly doll, so I could how my grandkids – and great grandkids – what my life was life.
I love 40’s hairstyles and hats. Love the low chunky heels and beautiful, glamorous, evening gowns from the movies.
Fun to read about the 40’s fashion!
I remember some of the designs of the 1940’s carried over to the 1950’s since I wore dresses with short sleeves, gathered at the waist and knee length in bright cotton fabric. It was very simple but cute.
I love the sweet collar details and puff sleeves on the dresses. They always look crisp, clean and very age appropriate.
I love the classic style of the clothes, especially the jackets and the skirts and the pants. The ladies doing a man’s job like Rosie the riveter.
I love the dresses and the feminine colors for little girls. My grandmother wore these styles during the war, when she met my grandfather, who was a pilot. I love looking through old photos from their courting days!
Love all these fashions! It’s so fun to see Molly come back.
I enjoyed the article very much. I also love the little girls dresses.
Enjoyed the article, my mom wore a navy 1940’s suit when she married my dad in 1950 with a navy hat. so cool!
When it comes to 40s fashion, I love Peter Pan collars! I grew up with Molly as my American Girl of choice and she gave me an abiding love for historical fashion.
I just love the 40’s styles! They are very comfortable looking but also stylish! I was born in the wrong era!
I love that even though they were going through tough times, they made very practical and beautiful clothing with less while supporting a war effort.
Love the Skirt suits, and the little Minnie me outfits for the younger ones. Also the love the hats the ladies wore, so classy and feminine. Thanks for the opportunity to enter this contest.
I enjoyed the article very much. I also love the dresses. They remind me of dresses I used to wear.
I enjoyed reading about the effect the war had on the fashion industry. Very interesting information about our ability to adapt to changing times much like today. I like the conservative, practical designs from that period in time.
The 40’s style was what I remember seeing my Mom wear in pictures. She was married in ’45
I love the full skirts on little girls dresses and the sweet collars. It was a time of pretty little outfits for children.
I wore a lot of these styles when I was in school and after. I always wore dresses and not pants too much. As my husband said he bought me my first pair of jeans. I also love making these types of clothing for the AG girls. Lots of fun to add all of the accessories too.
The 40’s fashions are interesting and a fun look for the dolls!
I like the clean lines and tailored fits.
I love that 40s style continue to look modern even today
These dresses bring back memories of my childhood. I loved wearing dresses!
These dresses bring back memories of my childhood. I loved wearing dresses!
I was born in 1948. I can remember my Mom wearing the styles of the 40’s and when I started school, all the girls wore the dresses. I remember a lot of plaid dresses with rounded collars. Nice to go back and reminisce about the style of clothes over the years!
I love this style. I have photos of my mother wearing many of these looks. The fashion was elegant, yet practical and very feminine.
I love 1940’s fashions! (Well really 1900 to 1950’s). I think little girls and boys were dressed so cute, especially little girls dresses! We like to learn about history and especially WWII, including my 8yo son who has an older Molly a sweet friend sold us for an excellent price! He is super excited about the re-release of Molly!!
I really enjoyed reading about the fashions during this time period. It would be great if you could do this from time to time for all the dolls eras. Thanks so much.
I love the prints and colors and the full skirts of the girls’ dresses.
Interesting article.
The 40’s was so neat and clean and stylish :)
I like the crisp lines, simple embellishments and clean lines of the 40’s outfits.
I have been making some historical clothes for American girl dolls. Now I should try some from the 40’s
I love the full skirts!
The 40 we’re before my time. But I loved seeing pictures of my grandma and great grandma dressed in thissty
keif clothes.
I love the clean cut look of the 40’s. Suites are such a nice and fine look.
I like the simple elegance and put together look of the 1940s looks. My mom had a few dresses and suits in her closet that she wore as a young woman in her early 20s. When my mom passed last August, my sister and I found them still hanging in the back of the closet with pictures of her wearing the outfits. It was a fun look back at my mother’s young years.
I especially love the bright colors of the 40’s! I quilt and the 1st 2 quilts I made were out of 40’s fabrics for my grandchildren. I still have some left and plan to make a 40’s dress out of some of the scraps for my grand daughter. I would love to have my own doll to dress up too!
It is fascinating to me how closely interwoven our political climate & our fashion evolution has been. I have many of these patterns & every time I read about a new fashion Era I can’t wait to get started on a new outfit. Keep’em coming, lol!
I like the simple little girls dresses.
I remember those styles from the 40’s. My mother copied dresses for me from Shirley Temple movies.
Surprisingly, I really like the utility clothing. The fact that they were able to cut down on frills and fabric while creating something that could be useful across multiple seasons and situations really appeals to me. I feel like a similar approach in today’s world would definitely help cut down on the environmental impact of fast fashion.
Great article. Loved the girls dresses of the 40’s.
I love the girls fashions with all of the pattern adaptations. I enjoy dressing my Molly in clothes from that time period.
I like the peplum-waisted jackets. Enjoyed the writeup of all the styles!
Love the little blue dress pictured. Great article, very interesting and informative.
I love the pleated skirts. So many of the styles from that period have become timeless classics.
Loved the article. The quality and detail of the clothing impressed me. Collars and cuffs that we don’t see very often now.
Your style guides are always so great. Thanks so much! I love the suits and dresses from the 40s, so stylish and smart. Those headscarves are the best. Thanks!
Clothes from the 40’s were fashionable yet frugal and made to last—what a contrast to today’s fast fashion!
I like the hairstyles and the dresses and all. I once made a Barbie dress for OCC that Mom said was kind of 40s style. Even made her a little hat that kinda got lost because her hair got so big. Here’s the pin I made to remember the doll: https://pin.it/56Q4AZX
Lots of great info, thanks
I love the 1940s look especially for children. I was born in 1946 and started school in 1952 and many of these styles were still in vogue. At that time little girls always wore dresses to school so we had our school dresses and Sunday/Party dresses. I miss those times. Also my mother was still wearing many of her 1940s clothing in the 1950s so I got to see many of those styles in person.
WWII fabric sourcing from livestock feed/flour sacks. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feed_sack_dress
During World War II, dressmaking-quality fabrics became in short supply as textile manufacturers produced for war efforts, and cotton yard goods were rationed.24 but feed sacks were considered part of the “industrial” category of uses, so feed sacks were still available.24 Recycling of them was encouraged by the US government.1 According to the Textile Research Center’s Willem Vogelsang, “A bag that contained 5 lb (2.3 kg) of sugar, for example, provided 1 ft (30 cm) of cloth, while a 100 lb (45 kg) bag provided slightly more than 1 yd (91 cm) of material, with four sacks providing enough for one adult woman’s dress.”7
At the industry’s peak, 1,300,000,000 yards (1,200,000 km) of cotton fabric were used in commodity bags, in 1946 accounting for 8.0% of the cotton goods production and 4.5% of total cotton consumption in the US.4
After World War II, use of cloth sacks for packaging declined and was replaced with less expensive paper.24 Most feed sack production ceased by the early 1960s.2
I liked the skirts on the dresses for little girls. I enjoyed reading the information in the blog.
Lovely informative article. Well done! Thank You.
Very interesting article. Enjoyed it.
I like the simplicity of fashion in that time era.
I love the tailored look of most of the clothes. They are actually more difficult to make than the 2020’s clothes for me. A true challenge and I love it. Thanks for helping us with the designs.
I love how smart looking the fashions of the 40’s. Business, power, style and class. Females placing themselves in society.
I like how modest and beautiful the dresses were.
Very interesting article on the history of fashion. The doll clothes are really cute
I really like the silhouette of the dresses and the way they flare out.
I love all the frills. The skirt suits were so smart looking!
Love the history of the forties the styles they had look like we have fashiohed after them for year
I just adore the dresses from this time period, especially for my AG Ruthie who has such a tiny collection.
I really liked the ruffles and laces and trims on the girls’ dresses. The style was really cute
I love everything about the War time clothing! Style, shape and detail 💙💙💙
I have always loved the dresses and fabric prints from the 40’s. I admire the ingenuity of the designers and seamstresses who created such charming items on a shoestring budget. I also enjoy scarfs women wore in their hair.
I love the A-line skirts!
I love the simple lines and tailored look.
I love the dresses that were worn by young girls. They were so cute and stylish.
My favorite element is all of them. I am a 1940s history buff as my great grandmother worked in a factory for the war efforts (her outfits in the pictures!!) and my great grandfather stormed Normandy beach at Utah. So it’s easy to say 40’s is my favorite fashion. Always wishing we could go back to those styles!
I like the tailored, classic lines.
I was a kid in the 40s after the war, and we were so poor (dad was a farmer/moonshiner) the only fabric available for my clothes was from feedsacks. Still, Mother managed to make me cute, ruffled dresses with puff sleeves from that fabric and I was always fashionably dressed! I love the adult fashions of that era, with their padded shoulders and cinched waist jackets.
I like the economic use of fabric used in the 40s (due to the War).
I love the 40’s style dresses
I lived it, I wore it, I don’t like to sew it though!
The little girls dresses are my favorites as they were fancy and so feminine!
I’m not a fan of the box suit…..but I love the A-line dresses, particularly the hem line at the knee. It’s especially flattering I think to the feminine figure. The shoulder pads also added to that. I was born in 1942, so I lived during that era and remember how beautiful my older sisters were when they were all dressed up in style!
I love smocking, shoulder pads, below-knee hemlines, tailored looks.
I can’t wait to dress my doll like I was dressed in the late 40s.
I like the separates. A suit for women is super cute especially on a doll.
I love the colors.
The separates are my favorite from this era along with the head scarves.
I love the skirt suits…the fitted tailoring but with the peplum, and other bits to retain femininity.
I love the classic look of the 40’s – dresses and suits – not too formal yet now too casual. I feel you act like you dress. I love the way women dressed like women in the 40-50’s era.
I was born in 1940 so I don’t remember much about the styles until I was in school. I remember the ladies suits which I like, and I remember jeans. When I was in the third grade, my Mother order me a pair of red jeans and a pair of green jeans. Everyone else in school had blue jeans. Mother ordered my school clothes from either Sears or Spiegal. When we went to church, all the ladies were dressed up with hats and gloves to go with their suits or dresses.
Lorie
June 14, 2022
love the fabrics!